doesn't know if it's under warrantee? $200 for a diagnosis?What are they supposed to say until they have the vehicle up on their lift to diagnose it for themselves?
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doesn't know if it's under warrantee? $200 for a diagnosis?What are they supposed to say until they have the vehicle up on their lift to diagnose it for themselves?
Pretty standard for dealers to quote their diagnostic fee to, well, diagnose, especially for a vehicle not under the B2B warranty. It's not charged if the concern is indeed covered by a (Ford) warranty/ESP, not at any dealer I've seen.doesn't know if it's under warrantee? $200 for a diagnosis?
You and I agree on a number of things, everything to too much to askPretty standard for dealers to quote their diagnostic fee to, well, diagnose, especially for a vehicle not under the B2B warranty. It's not charged if the concern is indeed covered by a (Ford) warranty/ESP, not at any dealer I've seen.
Sure, they could look up individual parts, but Ford doesn't approve warranty claims based on what the customer wants, so that wouldn't really help anyway.
Does it take a $200 diag fee to put it on the lift and inspect the CVs? Well, no. Seems the sort of thing that should be covered by a complimentary multipoint inspection, but then you'd need to go in asking for that and see what they notice, rather than trying to get them to diagnose a vibration concern.
Here's an example of an older version of Ford's multipoint inspection sheet, showing what the techs are supposed to look for:
A warrantee is the owner of the vehicle to whom a warranty is made....My service manager step son would interview customer and test drive it to check the problem, verify any warrantee before tying up a lift and a tech.
thank you miss wilsonA warrantee is the owner of the vehicle to whom a warranty is made.
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I hate to say it because it should not be this way, but nothing productive usually comes from letting the service dept know about problems you read about online. And it is usually not a good idea to project the root cause. Just take it in, tell them the symptoms (shakes when accelerating) and let them figure out the problem for themselves.True. I was just telling them about all of these owners having the exact problem and why it hasn’t been recalled yet. I guess I could pay the 209 and chance it
From what I understand it's the carrier bearing that connects the intermediate shaft on the hybrid that fails causing the vibration. That's what I've seen a few times now but I think people are just universally calling this a half-shaft or CV failure.Quite a few Mavericks hybrid have had issue with the CV Axle failing prematurely and got them replaced under warranty(under 36k miles). Not on if CV axle is part of powertrain warranty...
In warrantyThere is no recall. What did the dealers say when you brought it in for diagnosis under warranty? Or are you out of warranty already?
I swapped out tires to rule out that it was tires or rims in any way. Indeed it was the CV axles.Is cv joints under power train 800000 warranty? Constant velocity joint
Good afternoon. If you are still experiencing this concern, please send over a DM with your VIN and Ford dealer info.Looking to get in contact with someone with ford that cares about helping me . I’ve reached out to multiple dealerships all saying there is no recall on the cv joint or axel and they don’t know of any issues and yet there are forums here dedicated to this exact problem. My truck is shaking when I press the gas and getting worse. I’ve heard nothing about resolving this. Let me know friends